8.0E 8.E Capacitance (Exercises)
8.0E 8.E Capacitance (Exercises)
E: Capacitance (Exercises)
Conceptual Questions
8.2 Capacitors and Capacitance
1. Does the capacitance of a device depend on the applied voltage? Does the capacitance of a device depend on the charge
residing on it?
2. Would you place the plates of a parallel-plate capacitor closer together or farther apart to increase their capacitance?
3. The value of the capacitance is zero if the plates are not charged. True or false?
4. If the plates of a capacitor have different areas, will they acquire the same charge when the capacitor is connected across a
battery?
5. Does the capacitance of a spherical capacitor depend on which sphere is charged positively or negatively?
27. A set of parallel plates has a capacitance of 5.0µF. How much charge must be added to the plates to increase the potential
difference between them by 100 V?
28. Consider Earth to be a spherical conductor of radius 6400 km and calculate its capacitance.
29. If the capacitance per unit length of a cylindrical capacitor is 20 pF/m, what is the ratio of the radii of the two cylinders?
30. An empty parallel-plate capacitor has a capacitance of 20µF. How much charge must leak off its plates before the voltage
across them is reduced by 100 V?
parallel. A 500-V potential difference is applied across the combination. Determine the voltage across each capacitor and the
charge on each capacitor.
33. Find the total capacitance of this combination of series and parallel capacitors shown below.
34. Suppose you need a capacitor bank with a total capacitance of 0.750 F but you have only 1.50-mF capacitors at your
disposal. What is the smallest number of capacitors you could connect together to achieve your goal, and how would you
connect them?
35. What total capacitances can you make by connecting a 5.00-μF and a 8.00-μF capacitor?
36. Find the equivalent capacitance of the combination of series and parallel capacitors shown below.
38. A 40-pF capacitor is charged to a potential difference of 500 V. Its terminals are then connected to those of an uncharged
10-pF capacitor. Calculate:
(a) the original charge on the 40-pF capacitor;
(b) the charge on each capacitor after the connection is made; and
(c) the potential difference across the plates of each capacitor after the connection.
39. A 2.0-μF capacitor and a 4.0-μF capacitor are connected in series across a 1.0-kV potential. The charged capacitors are
then disconnected from the source and connected to each other with terminals of like sign together. Find the charge on each
capacitor and the voltage across each capacitor.
κ=5.4.
(a) Find the magnitude of the electric field in the wall between two charge layers.
(b) Find the potential difference between the inside and the outside of the cell. Which is at higher potential?
(c) A typical cell in the human body has volume 10 m . Estimate the total electrical field energy stored in the wall
−16 3
of a cell of this size when assuming that the cell is spherical. (Hint: Calculate the volume of the cell wall.)
55. A parallel-plate capacitor with only air between its plates is charged by connecting the capacitor to a battery. The
capacitor is then disconnected from the battery, without any of the charge leaving the plates.
(a) A voltmeter reads 45.0 V when placed across the capacitor. When a dielectric is inserted between the plates,
completely filling the space, the voltmeter reads 11.5 V. What is the dielectric constant of the material?
(b) What will the voltmeter read if the dielectric is now pulled away out so it fills only one-third of the space between
the plates?
of Teflon™.
59. (a) What is the capacitance of a parallel-plate capacitor with plates of area 1.50m
2
that are separated by 0.0200 mm of
neoprene rubber?
(b) What charge does it hold when 9.00 V is applied to it?
60. Two parallel plates have equal and opposite charges. When the space between the plates is evacuated, the electrical field
is E = 3.20 × 10 V /m . When the space is filled with dielectric, the electrical field is E = 2.50 × 10 V /m .
5 5
(a) What is the surface charge density on each surface of the dielectric?
(b) What is the dielectric constant?
61. The dielectric to be used in a parallel-plate capacitor has a dielectric constant of 3.60 and a dielectric strength of
1.60 × 10 V /m . The capacitor has to have a capacitance of 1.25 nF and must be able to withstand a maximum potential
7
difference 5.5 kV. What is the minimum area the plates of the capacitor may have?
62. When a 360-nF air capacitor is connected to a power supply, the energy stored in the capacitor is 18.5μJ. While the
capacitor is connected to the power supply, a slab of dielectric is inserted that completely fills the space between the plates.
This increases the stored energy by 23.2μJ.
(a) What is the potential difference between the capacitor plates?
(b) What is the dielectric constant of the slab?
63. A parallel-plate capacitor has square plates that are 8.00 cm on each side and 3.80 mm apart. The space between the
plates is completely filled with two square slabs of dielectric, each 8.00 cm on a side and 1.90 mm thick. One slab is Pyrex
glass and the other slab is polystyrene. If the potential difference between the plates is 86.0 V, find how much electrical
energy can be stored in this capacitor.
Additional Problems
64. A capacitor is made from two flat parallel plates placed 0.40 mm apart. When a charge of 0.020μC is placed on the plates
the potential difference between them is 250 V.
(a) What is the capacitance of the plates?
(b) What is the area of each plate?
(c) What is the charge on the plates when the potential difference between them is 500 V?
(d) What maximum potential difference can be applied between the plates so that the magnitude of electrical fields
between the plates does not exceed 3.0 MV/m?
65. An air-filled (empty) parallel-plate capacitor is made from two square plates that are 25 cm on each side and 1.0 mm
apart. The capacitor is connected to a 50-V battery and fully charged. It is then disconnected from the battery and its plates
are pulled apart to a separation of 2.00 mm.
(a) What is the capacitance of this new capacitor?
(b) What is the charge on each plate?
(c) What is the electrical field between the plates?
66. Suppose that the capacitance of a variable capacitor can be manually changed from 100 to 800 pF by turning a dial
connected to one set of plates by a shaft, from 0° to 180°. With the dial set at 180° (corresponding to C=800pF), the
79. Electronic flash units for cameras contain a capacitor for storing the energy used to produce the flash. In one such unit the
flash lasts for 1/675 fraction of a second with an average light power output of 270 kW.
(a) If the conversion of electrical energy to light is 95% efficient (because the rest of the energy goes to thermal
energy), how much energy must be stored in the capacitor for one flash?
(b) The capacitor has a potential difference between its plates of 125 V when the stored energy equals the value stored
in part (a). What is the capacitance?
80. A spherical capacitor is formed from two concentric spherical conducting shells separated by a vacuum. The inner sphere
has radius 12.5 cm and the outer sphere has radius 14.8 cm. A potential difference of 120 V is applied to the capacitor.
(a) What is the energy density at r=12.6cm, just outside the inner sphere?
(b) What is the energy density at r=14.7cm, just inside the outer sphere?
(c) For the parallel-plate capacitor the energy density is uniform in the region between the plates, except near the edges
of the plates. Is this also true for the spherical capacitor?
81. A metal plate of thickness t is held in place between two capacitor plates by plastic pegs, as shown below. The effect of
the pegs on the capacitance is negligible. The area of each capacitor plate and the area of the top and bottom surfaces of the
inserted plate are all A. What is the capacitance of this system?
83. A parallel-plate capacitor is filled with two dielectrics, as shown below. Show that the capacitance is given by
A κ1 κ2
C = 2ε0 .
d κ1 + κ2
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